• Neurosurgery · Jun 2015

    Estimating the additive benefit of surgical excision to stereotactic radiosurgery in the management of metastatic brain disease.

    • Matthew R Quigley, Nicholas Bello, Diana Jho, Russell Fuhrer, Stephen Karlovits, and Farrel J Buchinsky.
    • *Division of Neurosurgery, Guthrie Medical Group, Sayre, Pennsylvania; ‡Department of Neurosurgery, Allegheny General Hospital, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; §Department of Radiation Oncology, Allegheny General Hospital, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; ¶Department of Pediatric Otolaryngology, Allegheny General Hospital, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
    • Neurosurgery. 2015 Jun 1;76(6):707-12; discussion 712-3.

    BackgroundThere are limited data on the benefits of surgical tumor resection plus stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) in comparison with SRS alone for patients with oligometastatic brain disease.ObjectiveTo determine the benefit of adding resection to SRS.MethodsWe reviewed 162 consecutive patients with oligometastatic brain disease, who underwent surgical tumor resection and SRS boost (n = 49) or SRS alone (n = 113). Patients receiving prior whole brain radiation therapy were excluded. Factors related to patient survival and time-to-local recurrence (TTLR) were determined by Cox regression. The effect of complete resection + SRS boost on survival was further explored by propensity score matching.ResultsThe average age of the cohort was 65.3 years, it was 49.4% female, and included 260 brain tumors, of which 119 tumors were single. Seventy-three brain tumors recurred (28%). TTLR was related to radiation-sensitive pathology (hazards ratio [HR] = 0.34, P = .001), treatment volume (HR = 1.078/mL, P = .002), and complete tumor resection (HR = 0.37, P = .015). Factors related to survival were age (HR = 1.21/decade, P = .037), Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance score (HR = 1.9, P = .001), and complete surgical resection (HR = 0.55, P = .01). Propensity score matched analysis of complete surgical resection + SRS boost (n = 40) vs SRS alone (n = 80) yielded nearly identical survival results (HR = 0.52, P = .030) compared with the initial unmatched sample. Incomplete tumor resection had both median survival and TTLR equivalent to SRS alone.ConclusionComplete surgical resection + SRS boost is associated with improved survival and reduced likelihood of local tumor recurrence in comparison with SRS alone. Incomplete resection did not improve survival or TTLR compared with SRS alone.

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